Add navigation and routing navigation-routing

Learn how multiple views in the SPA can be supported by mapping to AEM Pages with the SPA Editor SDK. Dynamic navigation is implemented using React Router and React Core Components.

Objective

  1. Understand the SPA model routing options available when using the SPA Editor.
  2. Learn to use React Router to navigate between different views of the SPA.
  3. Use AEM React Core Components to implement a dynamic navigation that is driven by the AEM page hierarchy.

What you will build

This chapter will add navigation to a SPA in AEM. The navigation menu is driven by the AEM page hierarchy and will make use of the JSON model provided by the Navigation Core Component.

Navigation added

Prerequisites

Review the required tooling and instructions for setting up a local development environment. This chapter is a continuation of the Map Components chapter, however to follow along all you need is a SPA-enabled AEM project deployed to a local AEM instance.

Add the Navigation to the Template add-navigation-template

  1. Open a browser and login to AEM, http://localhost:4502/. The starting code base should already be deployed.

  2. Navigate to the SPA Page Template: http://localhost:4502/editor.html/conf/wknd-spa-react/settings/wcm/templates/spa-page-template/structure.html.

  3. Select the outer-most Root Layout Container and click its Policy icon. Be careful not to select the Layout Container un-locked for authoring.

    Select the root layout container policy icon

  4. Create a new policy named SPA Structure:

    SPA Structure Policy

    Under Allowed Components > General > select the Layout Container component.

    Under Allowed Components > WKND SPA REACT - STRUCTURE > select the Navigation component:

    Select Navigation component

    Under Allowed Components > WKND SPA REACT - Content > select the Image and Text components. You should have 4 total components selected.

    Click Done to save the changes.

  5. Refresh the page, and add the Navigation component above the un-locked Layout Container:

    add Navigation component to template

  6. Select the Navigation component and click its Policy icon to edit the policy.

  7. Create a new policy with a Policy Title of SPA Navigation.

    Under the Properties:

    • Set the Navigation Root to /content/wknd-spa-react/us/en.
    • Set the Exclude Root Levels to 1.
    • Uncheck Collect all child pages.
    • Set the Navigation Structure Depth to 3.

    Configure Navigation Policy

    This will collect the navigation 2 levels deep beneath /content/wknd-spa-react/us/en.

  8. After saving your changes you should see the populated Navigation as part of the template:

    Populated navigation component

Create Child Pages

Next, create additional pages in AEM that will serve as the different views in the SPA. We will also inspect the hierarchical structure of the JSON model provided by AEM.

  1. Navigate to the Sites console: http://localhost:4502/sites.html/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home. Select the WKND SPA React Home Page and click Create > Page:

    Create new page

  2. Under Template select SPA Page. Under Properties enter Page 1 for the Title and page-1 as the name.

    Enter the initial page properties

    Click Create and in the dialog pop-up, click Open to open the page in the AEM SPA Editor.

  3. Add a new Text component to the main Layout Container. Edit the component and enter the text: Page 1 using the RTE and the H2 element.

    Sample content page 1

    Feel free to add additional content, like an image.

  4. Return to the AEM Sites console and repeat the above steps, creating a second page named Page 2 as a sibling of Page 1.

  5. Lastly create a third page, Page 3 but as a child of Page 2. Once completed the site hierarchy should look like the following:

    Sample Site Hierarchy

  6. The Navigation component can now be used to navigate to different areas of the SPA.

    Navigation and routing

  7. Open the page outside of the AEM Editor: http://localhost:4502/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home.html. Use the Navigation component to navigate to different views of the app.

  8. Use your browser’s developer tools to inspect the network requests, as you navigate. Screenshots below are captured from Google Chrome browser.

    Observe Network requests

    Observe that after the initial page load, subsequent navigation does not cause a full page refresh and that network traffic is minimized when returning to previously visited pages.

Hierarchy Page JSON Model hierarchy-page-json-model

Next, inspect the JSON Model that drives the multi-view experience of the SPA.

  1. In a new tab, open the JSON model API provided by AEM: http://localhost:4502/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en.model.json. It may be helpful to use a browser extension to format the JSON.

    This JSON content is requested when the SPA is first loaded. The outer structure looks like the following:

    code language-json
    {
    "language": "en",
    "title": "en",
    "templateName": "spa-app-template",
    "designPath": "/libs/settings/wcm/designs/default",
    "cssClassNames": "spa page basicpage",
    ":type": "wknd-spa-react/components/spa",
    ":items": {},
    ":itemsOrder": [],
    ":hierarchyType": "page",
    ":path": "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en",
    ":children": {
       "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home": {},
       "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-1": {},
       "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-2": {},
       "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-2/page-3": {}
       }
    }
    

    Under :children you should see an entry for each of the pages created. The content for all of the pages is in this initial JSON request. With the navigation routing, subsequent views of the SPA is loaded rapidly, since the content is already available client-side.

    It is not wise to load ALL of the content of a SPA in the initial JSON request, as this would slow down the initial page load. Next, lets look at how the hierarchy depth of pages are collected.

  2. Navigate to the SPA Root template at: http://localhost:4502/editor.html/conf/wknd-spa-react/settings/wcm/templates/spa-app-template/structure.html.

    Click the Page properties menu > Page Policy:

    Open the page policy for SPA Root

  3. The SPA Root template has an extra Hierarchical Structure tab to control the JSON content collected. The Structure Depth determines how deep in the site hierarchy to collect child pages beneath the root. You can also use the Structure Patterns field to filter out additional pages based on a regular expression.

    Update the Structure Depth to 2:

    Update structure depth

    Click Done to save the changes to the policy.

  4. Re-open the JSON model http://localhost:4502/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en.model.json.

    code language-json
    {
    "language": "en",
    "title": "en",
    "templateName": "spa-app-template",
    "designPath": "/libs/settings/wcm/designs/default",
    "cssClassNames": "spa page basicpage",
    ":type": "wknd-spa-react/components/spa",
    ":items": {},
    ":itemsOrder": [],
    ":hierarchyType": "page",
    ":path": "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en",
    ":children": {
       "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home": {},
       "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-1": {},
       "/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-2": {}
       }
    }
    

    Notice that the Page 3 path has been removed: /content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-2/page-3 from the initial JSON model. This is because Page 3 is at a level 3 in the hierarchy and we updated the policy to only include content at a max depth of level 2.

  5. Re-open the SPA homepage: http://localhost:4502/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home.html and open your browser’s developer tools.

    Refresh the page and you should see the XHR request to /content/wknd-spa-react/us/en.model.json, which is the SPA Root. Notice that only three child pages are included based on the hierarchy depth configuration to the SPA Root template made earlier in the tutorial. This does not include Page 3.

    Initial JSON request - SPA Root

  6. With the developer tools open, use the Navigation component to navigate directly to Page 3:

    Observe that a new XHR request is made to: /content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-2/page-3.model.json

    Page three XHR Request

    The AEM Model Manager understands that the Page 3 JSON content is not available and automatically triggers the additional XHR request.

  7. Experiment with deep links by navigating directly to: http://localhost:4502/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-2.html. Also observe that the browser’s back button continues to work.

Inspect React Routing react-routing

The navigation and routing is implemented with React Router. React Router is a collection of navigation components for React applications. AEM React Core Components uses features of React Router to implement the Navigation component used in the previous steps.

Next, inspect how React Router is integrated with the SPA and experiment using React Router’s Link component.

  1. In the IDE open the file index.js at ui.frontend/src/index.js.

    code language-js
    /* index.js */
    import { Router } from 'react-router-dom';
    ...
    ...
     ModelManager.initialize().then(pageModel => {
        const history = createBrowserHistory();
        render(
        <Router history={history}>
            <App
            history={history}
            cqChildren={pageModel[Constants.CHILDREN_PROP]}
            cqItems={pageModel[Constants.ITEMS_PROP]}
            cqItemsOrder={pageModel[Constants.ITEMS_ORDER_PROP]}
            cqPath={pageModel[Constants.PATH_PROP]}
            locationPathname={window.location.pathname}
            />
        </Router>,
        document.getElementById('spa-root')
        );
    });
    

    Notice that the App is wrapped in the Router component from React Router. The ModelManager, provided by the AEM SPA Editor JS SDK, adds the dynamic routes to AEM Pages based on the JSON model API.

  2. Open the file Page.js at ui.frontend/src/components/Page/Page.js

    code language-js
    class AppPage extends Page {
      get containerProps() {
        let attrs = super.containerProps;
        attrs.className =
          (attrs.className || '') + ' page ' + (this.props.cssClassNames || '');
        return attrs;
      }
    }
    
    export default MapTo('wknd-spa-react/components/page')(
      withComponentMappingContext(withRoute(AppPage))
    );
    

    The Page SPA component uses the MapTo function to map Pages in AEM to a corresponding SPA component. The withRoute utility helps to dynamically route the SPA to the appropriate AEM Child page based on the cqPath property.

  3. Open the Header.js component at ui.frontend/src/components/Header/Header.js.

  4. Update the Header to wrap the <h1> tag in a Link to the homepage:

    code language-diff
      //Header.js
      import React, {Component} from 'react';
    + import {Link} from 'react-router-dom';
      require('./Header.css');
    
    export default class Header extends Component {
    
        render() {
            return (
                <header className="Header">
                <div className="Header-container">
    +              <Link to="/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home.html">
                        <h1>WKND</h1>
    +              </Link>
                </div>
                </header>
            );
        }
    

    Instead of using a default <a> anchor tag we use <Link> provided by React Router. As long as the to= points to a valid route, the SPA will switch to that route and not perform a full page refresh. Here we simply hard-code the link to the home page to illustrate the use of Link.

  5. Update the test at App.test.js at ui.frontend/src/App.test.js.

    code language-diff
    + import { BrowserRouter as Router } from 'react-router-dom';
      import App from './App';
    
      it('renders without crashing', () => {
        const div = document.createElement('div');
    -   ReactDOM.render(<App />, div);
    +   ReactDOM.render(<Router><App /></Router>, div);
      });
    

    Since we are using features of React Router within a static component referenced in App.js we need to update the unit test to account for it.

  6. Open a terminal, navigate to the root of the project, and deploy the project to AEM using your Maven skills:

    code language-shell
    $ cd aem-guides-wknd-spa.react
    $ mvn clean install -PautoInstallSinglePackage
    
  7. Navigate to one of the pages in the SPA in AEM: http://localhost:4502/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home/page-1.html

    Instead of using the Navigation component to navigate, use the link in the Header.

    Header link

    Observe that a full page refresh is not triggered and that the SPA routing is working.

  8. Optionally, experiment with the Header.js file using a standard <a> anchor tag:

    code language-js
    <a href="/content/wknd-spa-react/us/en/home.html">
        <h1>WKND</h1>
    </a>
    

    This can help illustrate the difference between SPA routing and regular web page links.

Congratulations! congratulations

Congratulations, you learned how multiple views in the SPA can be supported by mapping to AEM Pages with the SPA Editor SDK. Dynamic navigation has been implemented using React Router and added to the Header component.

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